The Umayyad Rise to the Caliphate
29
sides agreed to put their dispute to arbitration. Each side was to
name
a representative and, at an agreed time and place, the two
representatives were to meet and arbitrate the dispute. Like the
raising of the Korans, the arbitration too has become famous.
Mu‘awiya appointed ‘Amr b. al-‘As as his representative while ‘Ali
chose a former governor of Kufa and early Muslim with a reputation
for piety, Abu Musa al-Ash‘ari.
Why ‘Ali chose Abu Musa is something of a problem. He had
been governor of Kufa when ‘Ali arrived there in pursuit of ‘A’isha,
Talha and al-Zubayr before the battle of the Camel, and he had made
it clear that he did not want
to become involved in the
Fitna,
advising the Kufans to remain aloof. After ‘Ali gained possession of
Kufa, Abu Musa was forced to leave the town. Now, however, we
find him chosen as ‘Ali’s representative in the vital arbitration
process. The only explanation which appears to make sense is that
he was forced upon ‘Ali by those pious followers who had been
instrumental in getting him to accept the arbitration principle in the
first place.
The traditions about the meeting of the arbitrators are confused
and often contradictory. For one thing, it is not at all clear what they
were to discuss. Was it merely the question
of the legitimacy of
‘Uthman’s murder, or the choice of a caliph? For another, how was
the arbitration to proceed? We are told that the Book of God and the
Sunna
were to be examined, but this raises questions about the
significance of these terms at such an early date and how they were
to provide answers for the problems facing the Muslims. Different
dates and places for the meeting of the arbitrators are given, and this
has led some to suggest that they
met more than once and in
different places. There is general agreement that the arbitration was
inconclusive and that it broke up in disarray, but the reports about it
do not really make sense. Abu Musa is said to have been tricked by
‘Amr b. al-‘As into publicly abandoning his support for ‘Ali on the
understanding that ‘Amr would abandon his support for Mu‘awiya,
but, after Abu Musa had fulfilled his side of the bargain, ‘Amr
refused to honour his side. It has been pointed out that if such a
blatant piece of trickery did occur, it would have been easy for ‘Ali
and his supporters to refuse to accept any outcome of the arbitration.
In
any case, the arbitration does not appear to have had much
importance for the further development of the
Fitna,
except insofar as
‘Ali had diminished his status as caliph by agreeing to take part in it.
More important was the major split which occurred in the support for